Executive Director of Jews for the Preservation of Firearms OwnershipFleet Marine Force Medic, Third Marine Air Wing, Vietnam Veteran

America owes everything to you. You sacrificed your youth, you saw your buddies die before your eyes, you gave up life and family and love as you fought in Europe or the Pacific — all to save the world from fascism.

We can’t even measure how much we owe you — you, and the staunch women who
stood with you — the WACs, the Waves, the nurses who treated the wounded under
unthinkable conditions, and the Rosie-the-Riveters who kept the country going
back home. Yet, in the decades since the end of the war, your victory has been
stolen. From you, from your children, your grandchildren, and from all of us.

You won a long, hard, painful battle. But when you came home, you lost the war.
You lost the Bill of Rights and freedom. And so we all lost.

America is becoming a lot like the countries you fought against.

The country you fought for was a land of self-reliant people, people proud to
stand on their own two feet. It was a country of decency, of neighbors and
neighborhoods, where people took care of each other, their families and
themselves. It was a country where citizens had a say in what their government
did, a country where the government respected private property, family life,
the right to worship, the right to express opinions without fear, the right to
own firearms, and the whole way of life those freedoms stood for.

It wasn’t perfect, but it was America.

The countries you fought against were rule-ridden bureaucracies where citizens
did what they were told — or else. They were countries where people were
supposed to hate whomever the government wanted them to hate, and to love and
trust the government more than they loved and trusted themselves. In these
countries, children belonged more to the rulers than to their mothers and
fathers, and private property was subject to control by bureaucrats. In these
countries people didn’t dare do or say anything the politicians didn’t approve
of.

Today in the United States there are people who spit on the memory of your
sacrifices — people like Sen. Charles Schumer, who successfully pushes "gun
control" laws that trash the Second Amendment, and Sen. John McCain, whose
infamous "campaign finance" law made free speech a federal crime for
independent advocacy groups. We shrink before officials who decree that
unpopular opinions are "hate speech." We endure leaders who tell us that it’s
wrong to hate certain groups of people, but perfectly okay for those groups to
hate and malign others. Today much of America is controlled by people who’ll
fine us or even put us in prison for doing perfectly harmless things to our own
land and homes.

Free speech. The right to keep and bear arms. Property rights. The right to
live your daily life free of interference from people who want to push you
around. Weren’t these rights the very things you were fighting for?

The steady downhill slide

This process of destruction isn’t new. You no sooner came home than the
government you fought for started handing over power to the governments you
defeated — and even worse governments. They did it by handing authority to the
United Nations, an organization dominated by unfree countries who don’t share,
or even have minimal respect for, the values that gave us the Bill of Rights.
All they want is to take what they can get from us.

The U.N. quickly dragged us into another war in Korea - where many of you also
suffered and died. Since then its powers have expanded so much that the U.N.
has gained control over some U.S. lands (in the name of "biosphere sites,"
"world heritage protection," and "anti-desertification" treaties). Now they’ve
even got a world court — run from our own New York City, even though the
impotent U.S. voted against it. This court can try American citizens and
soldiers without giving them any
of the constitutional protections you fought so hard for.

And next they’re talking about imposing global taxes. On you. On what Tom
Brokaw rightly called The Greatest Generation. And on us, your sometimes-less
courageous successors.

The downhill slide has been steady: inflationary spending, debasement of the
currency, punitive taxes, propagandizing of schoolchildren so they can’t think
for themselves, restrictions on property rights. Politicians have maneuvered to
prop up the dangerously broken Social Security system, which Ronald Reagan
rightly called an "intergenerational Ponzi scheme." They’ve created giveaway
programs that let everyone from drug addicts to billionaire businessmen live
off the sweat of ordinary working people. The regulations of this Nanny State
have us so wrapped in bureaucratic red tape we can hardly move. And often we
dare not express our honest opinions for fear of being labeled — sometimes
even punished — for being a "hater," a "gun nut," or an "extremist" (which
sometimes means nothing more than being an independent thinker).

Your federal government even passed a "gun-control" law (the Gun Control Act of 1968) based directly on the Nazi law that Sen. Thomas Dodd had the Library of Congress translate for him. This Nazi law was then signed by "Mr. Great Society", President Lyndon Johnson [1]

Did you risk your life fighting Hitler so that American politicians - some of
whom you voted for and contributed money to — could impose Hitler’s very own
laws on you? But that’s exactly what happened — and that was only the camel’s
nose under the tent when it came to "gun control".

Who’s to blame?

Good Americans were once spirited, individualistic, independent, and skeptical
of government power. Now, good Americans are a lot like the stereotypical "good
Germans" of Hitler’s day, compliant, docile, and worshipful of government.

This is largely our fault — we of the Baby Boom and Generation X. We let you
down. We, who in many cases knew nothing but comfort and security, weren’t
willing to sacrifice for freedom, as you did. Fat, happy, and lazy, we believed
our government when it said it would take care of us, so we could remain
children forever. We believed the slickly smiling politicians when they told us
that if we just handed them enough power and money, they would eliminate every
danger and make us as eternally content as sleeping babies in a nursery.

We chose to ignore the fact that this is the path to an all-powerful police
state. We chose not to remember the historic truth that Ronald Reagan and many
others have expressed: A government big enough to give you everything you want
is big enough to take it all away. Already we see the government rationing
heath care — rationing care to the very people it falsely and grandly promised
to protect! How long before the old, the chronically ill, the "unfit" are
decreed to be, as the Nazis put it, "useless eaters"?

Maybe you won’t live to see the all-powerful state at its most cold and brutal.
Will your children or your grandchildren be the ones to suffer?

It’s a crime and a shame. It’s un-American in the truest sense.

But when you cry, "Why are they doing this to my country?" at least part of the
answer also has to be, "Well, where have you been all this time?"

Look in the mirror.

Your early life was tough, scarred by the hunger, insecurity, and national
self-doubt of the Depression. You did your duty in a war that was longer and
more brutal than anybody bargained for. When you came home, you were tired and
just wanted — perhaps for the first time since your childhood — to live
normally. And you deserved your peace.

But as Thomas Jefferson said, "The price of freedom is eternal vigilance."

The dirty little secret is that freedom wasn’t stolen from us entirely by other
people. We lost freedom ourselves because we weren’t vigilant. We didn’t
exercise our rights or responsibilities as citizens — we of the Baby Boom and
Gen X, but also you, our fathers and grandfathers of World War II.

We went on voting for politicians who lied to us. We obeyed — or maybe even
enforced — unconstitutional regulations. We had our hands out when politicians
bought our freedom in exchange for subsidies, grants, and "entitlements". We
tolerated, sometimes even cheered, violations of the Bill of Rights, as long as
they were committed against people or groups we didn’t like, not realizing the
Bill protected our rights, too.

When every president since Richard Nixon told us we had to fight another war, a
War on Drugs, we paid our taxes and cheered as millions of our fellow Americans
went to prison, as no-knock midnight raids became an American institution, and
as police forces were corrupted by the lure of illegal drugs and black-market
money, just as they had earlier been corrupted during Prohibition. None of this
has saved our children from drugs or made American streets safe. On the
contrary, it’s been one of the biggest destroyers of the Bill of Rights, and
one of the biggest factors in increasing violence and police-state power in the
U.S.

Even those of us who called ourselves conservative or libertarian often
demanded that "there ought to be a law" against every activity we disliked. We
forgot the very essence of freedom: The essence of freedom is leaving our
fellow citizens, and the citizens of other countries, alone as long as they’re
not using force or fraud against others.

It’s a fact — though sometimes not a simple one to live with: If you want
freedom you have to accept that, every day, millions of people might be doing
things you don’t personally approve of. You have to recognize that it isn’t
your right to stop them. That
was what people came to America for. We hate it when others try to keep us from
living our lives as we wish. But how often have we demanded laws to keep others
from going about their own peaceable business?

Look in the mirror. We have met the enemy. And as Pogo said, "He is us".

It’s time now for True Americans to act.

You World War II veterans, you World War II nurses, and you Korean War veterans
... you all have one last job to do in the fight for freedom. My fellow Vietnam
veterans, this goes for you, too — and for the young soldiers who fought in
the Persian Gulf, Afghanistan, the Balkans, and Somalia. It goes for you, also,
Rosie the Riveter.

You must teach the coming generations about what freedom really means. You must
teach them it’s not just having a lot of consumer goodies and fancy electronic
toys. You must remind them that those pleasures are the product, not the heart,
of free individual choices - and that those choices are protected by the Bill
of Rights. You must remind them of the real meaning of the things you fought
for — the freedom of peaceful individuals to speak, believe, and live as they
wish, unfettered by government dictates and punishments — and to respect the
right of others to do the same.

In fact, each and every one of us must do this if we want to restore and
maintain freedom.

We must all live our personal lives like free men and women while we fight to
restore the values of freedom to our country and our culture.

We must fight ALL enemies, foreign and domestic — as you pledged to do
when you signed on to serve your country. We must recognize that some of our
most ruthless, implacable enemies ARE
domestic — men and women who look like us and talk like us but whose values
are as foreign to America as those of any Hitler, Mussolini, or Hirohito. We
must not allow ourselves also to become domestic enemies of freedom by
supporting their policies.

America today seems a fallen land — politically and economically powerful, but
empty inside. A land that has lost its heart, its passion for freedom.

But freedom doesn’t have to be gone forever. Many times in the past enemies
made the mistake of thinking that America was lazy and complacent, too well-fed
and self-satisfied to put up a good fight. The Japanese believed it before
World War II. The terrorists believed it before September 11.

Our enemies have always been wrong.

You can never underestimate the fighting spirit of the American people, once
they know that a fight is necessary to preserve their own future and their
children’s. An awakened America is a powerful thing, and dangerous to all
opponents. We put aside our petty political differences, our daily pleasures,
and our selfishness and we fight like wildcats.

There’s hope for freedom — if we can unite behind the Bill of Rights, unite
behind freedom and individual rights. We must remember what the Bill of Rights is.
It is a list of things an honest government — a government that is truly of,
by, and for the people — is forever forbidden to do. And we must never ask our
government to do these forbidden things, or stand by silently when it tries to.

To unite behind the Bill of Rights is to unite against crushing, bloated,
grasping government power. This time our fight may not have to be with guns and
cartridges. This time our weapons can be ideas and ideals. This time our job is
to fight against the apathy and ignorance of our own culture. This time our aim
is to arouse other Americans so they’ll neither want nor tolerate an
un–American government whose false promises of security are used to enslave
them.

Let us make forever sure that our American dead have not died in vain, that
they have truly died for freedom. Let us live — and cherish — that freedom
every day of our lives.

Ways you can use this article to help restore freedom:

1. Read it yourself and discuss it with others.

2. Download copies from the JPFO Web site.

3. Share the article with everyone you know who was in the armed forces, is
thinking about enlisting, or has children who may enlist.

4. Reprint it in your organization’s newsletter; encourage veterans magazines
to reprint it. (It’s free of charge; all we ask is that publications include
our full copyright, contact information, and credits)

5. Reread, reprint, or re-circulate it on Patriots’ Day (April
19), VE Day (May 8), Armed Forces Day (third Saturday in May), Memorial
Day (May 30 or the last weekend in May), D-Day (June 6), Flag Day
(June 14), Bunker Hill Day (June 17), Independence Day (July 4),
the anniversary of the writing of "The Star-Spangled Banner" (September
14), Citizenship Day (September 17), the anniversary of the end
of the Revolutionary War (October 19), Veterans Day (November 11),
Pearl Harbor Day (December 7), or Bill of Rights Day (December 15).
Or re-circulate it on a date that’s as important as any of these
— August 1, the anniversary of the day in 1946 when newly returned
veterans had to take up arms once again to rid themselves of corrupt
politicians at the Battle of Athens, Tennessee.

6. If you belong to the Veterans of Foreign Wars, the American Legion or any
veterans group, circulate this article at meetings and social events.

7. Take copies of the article to the Rolling Thunder veterans rally on Memorial
Day weekend in Washington, DC.

8. Leave copies at your local barber shop, gun store, book store, or other
business that will welcome them.

The Bill of Rights

With modern language explanations of each article

Amendment I
- Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or
prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or
of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
the Government for a redress of grievances.

Government can neither impose a state religion upon you nor punish you for
exercising the religion of your choice. You may express your opinions, write
and publish what you wish, gather peacefully with others, and formally ask
government to correct injustices.

Amendment II
- A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State,
the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed.

Individuals (the people) have the right to own and use weapons without
interference from the government.

Amendment III
- No Soldier shall, in time of peace be quartered in any house, without the
consent of the Owner, nor in time of war, but in a manner to be prescribed by
law.

The government cannot force you to house its agents.

Amendment IV
- The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and
effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and
no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or
affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the
persons or things to be seized.

You may not be arrested or detained arbitrarily. No agency of government may
inspect or seize your property or possessions without first obtaining a
warrant. To obtain a warrant, they must show specific cause for the search or
seizure and swear under oath that they are telling the truth about these
reasons. Furthermore, the warrant itself must state specifically and in detail
the place, things, or people it covers. Warrants that are too general of vague
are not valid; searches or seizures that exceed the terms of the warrant are
not valid.

Amendment V
- No person shall be held to answer for a capital, or otherwise infamous crime,
unless on a presentment or indictment of a Grand Jury, except in cases arising
in the land or naval forces, or in the Militia, when in actual service in time
of War or public danger; nor shall any person be subject for the same offence
to be twice put in jeopardy of life or limb; nor shall be compelled in any
criminal case to be a witness against himself, nor be deprived of life,
liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor shall private property be
taken for public use, without just compensation.

No one outside the military may be tried for a serious crime without first being
indicted by a grand jury (of citizens). Once found not guilty, a person may not
be tried again for the same deed. You can’t be forced to be a witness or
provide evidence against yourself in a criminal case. You can’t be sent to
prison or have your assets seized without due process. The government can’t
take your property for public use without paying market value for it.

Amendment VI
- In all criminal prosecutions, the accused shall enjoy the right to a speedy
and public trial, by an impartial jury of the State and district wherein the
crime shall have been committed, which district shall have been previously
ascertained by law, and to be informed of the nature and cause of the
accusation; to be confronted with the witnesses against him; to have compulsory
process for obtaining witnesses in his favor, and to have the Assistance of
Counsel for his defence.

Trials cannot be unreasonably postponed or held in secret. In any criminal case
against you, you have a right to public trial by a jury of unbiased citizens
(thus ensuring that the state can’t use a "party-line" judge to railroad you).
The trial must be held in the state or region where the crime was committed.
You cannot be held without charges. You cannot be held on charges that are kept
secret from you. You have a right to know who is making accusations against you
and to confront those witnesses in court. You have the right to subpoena
witnesses to testify in your favor and a right to the services of an attorney.

Amendment VII
- In suits at common law, where the value in controversy shall exceed twenty
dollars, the right of trial by jury shall be preserved, and no fact tried by a
jury, shall be otherwise reexamined in any Court of the United States, than
according to the rules of the common law.

The right to trial by jury extends to civil, as well as criminal, cases. Once a
jury has made its decision, no court can overturn or otherwise change that
decision except via accepted legal processes (for instance, granting of a new
trial when an appeals court determines that your rights were violated in the
original proceeding).

Bail, fines, and punishments must all fit the crime and punishments must not be
designed for cruelty.

Amendment IX

- The enumeration in the Constitution, of certain rights, shall not be
construed to deny or disparage others retained by the people.

You have more rights than are specifically listed in the Bill of Rights.

Amendment X
- The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor
prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to
the people.

The U.S. federal government has only those specific powers granted to it by the
Constitution. All other powers belong either to the states or to individuals.

The Ninth and Tenth Amendments, taken together, mean that the federal
government has only the authority granted to it, while the people are presumed
to have any right or power not specifically forbidden to them. The Bill of
Rights as a whole is dedicated to describing certain key rights of the people
that the government is categorically forbidden to remove, abridge, or infringe.
The Bill of Rights clearly places the people in charge of their own lives, and
places the government within strict limits - the very opposite of the situation
we have allowed to develop today.

For an even more thorough, but extremely friendly explanation of
the Bill of Rights, order and read copies of the booklet, "It’s
Common Sense to Use Our Bill of Rights" (Gran’pa Jack #3), by attorney
Richard W. Stevens. See details on all the booklet series.)

Be sure to see details of our Gran'pa Jack booklet series. There are eight comic style booklets containing invaluable information, much of which is designed to be easily digested by younger folks, along with parental assistance where useful. Read the details and consider getting yourself a set or sets of these, all the better to pass around and help educate others.

If you want to understand the ultimate progression of "gun control,"
readDeath by "Gun Control": The Human Cost of Victim Disarmamentby Aaron Zelman and Richard W. Stevens. It begins with "reasonable
measures" to control the unruly; it ends in the death of a thousand
cuts - and millions of disarmed citizens.

Permission is granted to distribute this article
in its entirety, so long as full copyright information and full contact
information is given for JPFO. You may edit this article for publication as
long as Jews for the Preservation of Firearms Ownership is given approval of
the final edited version and you provide full credit.